Saturday, February 3, 2018

Blog 3: Super



Donald Super’s Life-Span / Life-Span Theory of Career Development

Super began to form these ideas in the late 1930s.

The beginning ideas were brought together in Super’s book The Dynamics of Vocational Adjustment in 1942. This showed a developmental view of career choice.  It emphasized career choice as a process and not just an event.

Super’s Four Domains:

1: Differential  Psychology – various individual traits
2: Developmental Psychology – how individuals develop abilities and interests – life stages
3: Occupational Sociology – occupational mobility and environmental influences
4: Personal Theory – self-concept and personal environment theory.

Super’s Fourteen Propositions:

1-3: People have different abilities, interests, and values – so they are qualified for various occupations (more than one at a time)
4-9: Self-concept in career choices – life stages – career patterns and career maturity
10-13: Synthesis and compromise with individuals and social factors – including work / life satisfaction
14: Work and occupation as a focus for personality organization – interplay of life roles like worker, student, leisurite, homemaker, and citizen.

Super’s Life-Career Rainbow:




Life roles, put in the space and time of life stages.

There are six life roles:

·         Homemaker
·         Worker
·         Citizen
·         Leisurite
·         Student
·         Child

These roles can cross over each other and fluctuate through the life span.

Here is a great resource on explanations of life roles:

The outer rim has 5 life stages:

·         Growth
·         Exploration
·         Establishment
·         Maintenance
·         Decline

Super called these life stages maxicycles. They are linear, but we all experience them in different ways and at different ages.  Super called the transition between life stages minicycles , where developmental tasks are mastered.

Career maturity: readiness to engage in the developmental task appropriate to age and level.  Note: maturity is never reached and always remains a goal.

Career adaptability: Used to describe career maturity for adults – to include planfulness, exploration, information, decision making, and reality orientation.

C-DAC (Career Development Assessment and Counseling Model:
(created by Sup0er and colleagues to put his theory into practice with career counseling)

·         Begins with client session asking concerns and review of data.
·         Phase 1 – Assessment of the importance of the work role with other life roles.
·         Phase 2 – Determining the career stage and career concerns. Identify resources for making and implementing choices and assess resources for work world adaption.
·         Phase 3 – Assess interests abilities and values with the trait and factor methodology.
·         Phase 4 – Self-concept and life themes with qualitative assessments.  This final step integrates the interview material and the assessment data.


This site has study flash cards:


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